Open source is a pivotal part of modern web development, yet so many companies who use open source every day don't even think twice about encouraging their team to go forward and contribute themselves. It's often simply overlooked, yet supporting open source provides so many benefits to both teams and individuals.
Who?
The team at Power has always seen the benefits of contributing towards open source. Our team frequently submit pull requests into open source repositories and it's strongly encouraged by our leadership team.
Our business technology department host a quarterly Nitro Create event (usually in person). Nitro, being the internal software we build from day to day, and the event being, for lack of a better term, a week long hackathon. Anyone who contributes to the creation of our product from developers, to scrum masters, to UX - are given the opportunity to work on some cool ideas and spend time working with teammates that they don't see as often.
Not only does this serve as a way to introduce all the new remote members to their teammates, but it gives our team something to look forward to on a regular basis that can be an outlet of creativity and social interaction. (which is much needed in today's climate!)
As you can imagine, COVID brought a lot of stress to a home remodeling business, but our business technology department fortunately kept operating throughout the pandemic (when I was hired) and worked hard to help the business pick up as fast as possible on the other side. Our Nitro Create event in June was canceled, and in September, with the world still in an unpredictable state, could not be held in person. So we did something (arguably) better.
What?
Instead of working together on our internal software, the team were given an opportunity to work on one of five open source projects which had the availability for us to support them and push out as much work as we could within a week. Needless to say, it was a great success. The team loved being given this opportunity. Over a third of the team that hadn't submitted an open source pull request before were enlightened to the idea and many have expressed they will continue contributing to open source as part of their ongoing development.
With 103 contributors across our team from developers, producteers, scrum masters, UX and site reliability engineers, we submitted 142 pull requests over the course of the week. The companies we supported were so appreciative. And for us, the reward was seeing the incredible difference we made in such a short period of time.
I'm sure I speak for us all when I say we're proud of the work we did, and genuinely felt welcomed by the teams as we integrated into their projects for the week.
Where?
Ruby for Good
One of the organizations we worked closely with for the week was Ruby for Good. Not only do they develop awesome products for communities that really need it, but it's all open source!
Throughout our week, we worked on several projects in development with members of the Ruby for Good team. Here are a few:
Abalone
rubyforgood / abalone
A data tracking and analytics app for abalone conservation efforts.
Abalone Analytics
The Abalone project is a data tracking and analytics system aimed at storing and measuring data for population trends, mortality rates, and breeding programs. Designed as a multi-tenant application, Abalone will initially serve two stakeholders, the Bodega Marine Laboratory at UC Davis and the Puget Sound Restoration Fund in Washington State.
The Bodega Marine Laboratory's White Abalone captive breeding program is working to prevent the extinction of the White Abalone (Haliotis sorenseni), an endangered marine snail. White abalone are one of seven species found in California and are culturally significant to the native people of the area. White abalone were perilously overfished throughout the 20th century, resulting in a 99 percent population decrease by the end of the 1970s. This group is working to reverse their decline and have already seen some great success, they currently have more abalone in the lab than exist in the wild!
Theโฆ
Who wouldn't want to save Gary the Abalone!?
CASA
rubyforgood / casa
Volunteer management system for nonprofit CASA, which serves foster youth in counties across America.
CASA Project and Organization Overview
A CASA (Court Appointed Special Advocate) is a role where a volunteer advocates on behalf of a youth in their county's foster care system. CASA is also the namesake role of the national organization, CASA, which exists to cultivate and supervise volunteers carrying out this work โย with county level chapters (operating relatively independently of each other) across the country.
Table of Contents
Welcome contributors!
We are very happy to have you! CASA and Ruby for Good are committed to welcoming new contributors of all skill levels.
Find issues to work on here on the issue board. Issues on the project's TODO column are another wayโฆ
Diaperbase
rubyforgood / human-essentials
Human Essentials is an inventory management system for diaper, incontinence, and period-supply banks. It supports them in distributing to partners, tracking inventory, and reporting stats and analytics.
Human Essentials
Mission ๐
Human Essentials is an inventory management system built to address the needs of Diaper Banks as directly and explicitly as possible and adapted to meet the needs of other Essentials Banks. Essentials Banks maintain inventory, receive donations and other human essentials supplies (e.g. diapers, period supplies), and issue distributions to community partner organizations. Like any non-profit, they also need to perform reports on this data and have day-to-day operational information they need. This application aims to serve those needs and facilitate the general operations of the Diaper Banks (e.g., using barcode readers, scale weighing, inventory audits).
Impact ๐
Human Essentials has over 200 registered banks across the United States at no cost to them. It is currently helping over 3 million children receive diapers and over 400k period supply recipients receive period supplies. Our team is in partnership with the National Diaper Bank Network (NDBN) andโฆ
Mutual Aid
rubyforgood / mutual-aid
Mutual aid management platform for groups who build, support, and strengthen community resilience.
โ๐พ On Hiatus...
Thanks for coming by! This project is in a period of diminution ใฝ๏ธ.
- โ๏ธ We, the current maintainers, no longer have enough capacity to dedicate to it, and
- โป๏ธ Mutual aid efforts we'd been connected to have evolved. As of now, none of them are actively using the app.
We of course welcome any injection of energy in the form of new maintainers, contributors or interest in using the app. Please get in touch by commenting here.
What is mutual aid?
Mutual aid is when people get together to build community by volunarily sharing resources with each other. Mutual aid groups are more concerned with local resiliency than global campaigns, prefer solidarity over charity, and have existed around the world for over 200 years. Mutual aid groups recognize that structural inequality and injustice must be accounted for and addressed inโฆ
TechGirlz
TechGirlz is an awesome organization aiming to inspire young girls to pursue a career in tech. Their mission is for such an important cause and the impact they are having is truly outstanding.
Our team really got stuck in throughout the week and led workshops for several groups of girls from all around the world teaching them about different fun tech such as VR. By the end of the week, the girls were teaching them!
Having contributed to Abalone and CASA, I can personally say the team are a great bunch and very welcoming to newcomers. If you are looking to get involved in open source for the first time, any of these repositories would be more than happy to have you, so check them out!
Continuing into Hacktoberfest
For Hacktoberfest, I submitted several PRs to both the Abalone and CASA projects, and I know that I'll be looking to do more in the future. It was a great challenge and a brilliant community initiative which brought together a lot of people and their awesome ideas.
For myself, I've found that jumping into open source has given me the opportunity to see how others work, introduce myself to different libraries and learn from a new, innovative community. I attribute the majority of my development as a coder to open source, be it articles or pull requests. If you are on the fence as to whether it'll be beneficial, trust me - you won't regret it.
Closing thoughts
Open source is a community which so many businesses rely on but so few support. Power giving us the opportunity to make a difference
by contributing to charitable and not-for-profit projects, truly emobodies the values of open source.
I hope this article and the efforts of Hacktoberfest inspire others to take the leap into the open source world. There is so much more to gain than just notches on your Github profile. (though, who doesn't love them!)
Power is a great company that has an ever-growing technology department, here's our job page if you're interested.
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